Yuma County, Colorado
Photographs

Yuma County Pioneer Photographs:

Edward W. Warriner married Augusta F. Savage, daughter of William Savage and
Lydia M. Stockwell,July 4, 1870 in Geauga, Ohio, per one tree.

They had a daughter born Jan 16, 1871 at Hambden, Geauga County.

Edward Warriner is farming in El Paso County, Colorado in 1880, 34, married
to Augusta 27, with daughter Bertha, 9, all born in Ohio.

In 1900 Franklin County, Nebraska, James born October 1888 in Nebraska, is
with Rachel A. Warriner May 1849 and "Eward" Sept 1847, both Ohio, farming.

Rachael A. "Werriner" and Edward are in Franklin County in 1910.

Edward W. Warriner ?- 1910 - is listed in the Franklin County file, with a
death notice.

Rachel (Hall) Warriner 1849-1933 is listed in the Franklin County obituary
file.

In 1910 Franklin County, William Warriner is 21, Daisy 23, just married.

James William Warriner, born at Franklin Nebraska October 26, 1889,
registered for WWI farming
in Yuma County, with a wife.

James proved up 280 acres in 10 and 11, 3S 45W in 1920, and Stock-claimed
forty acres next to it , also in 1920. Witnesses were John D. Petefish,
Rollie G. Easten (probably should be Eastin), Henry Vogel, Allen Keith, all with
Vernon, Colorado addresses.

In 1920 Yuma County James 31 and Daisy J. 35, born in Iowa , are
farming. They're still there in 1930 and 1940.

The 1934 directory has J.W. farming in 11-3S-45, and an H.H. Warriner running
a garage in Yuma.

The 1937 directory has C.C. Warriner (Velma) laborer, 15 miles north and 3
west of Yuma, a laborer, phone 3F23.

James 1889-1972 is buried in Wray. 81491738 - so is Daisy 1885-1968.

In 1900 Teller County, Colorado, Albert D. "Cain" born May 1861 in Wisconsin,
a carpenter, is married to Bertha E. Jan 1872 Ohio. They have Luella V.
April 1891 Colorado and Alva B. July 1896 Colorado.

August 8, 1940 Mullan, Idaho "at a dessert bridge on the lawn of the home of
Mrs. Albert Kane"

Bertha Elena Kane, daughter of Edward Willard Warriner and Florence Augusta
Savage, married Elmer Young Sept 5, 1942 in Lake County Montana. She was
born about 1873, Elmer about 1881.

March 1937 A 'Montana dust-bowl" farmer, Louis Richardson, faces a
charge of manslaughter today, more than a month after his wife
disappeared in subzero weather and later was found dead by searchers in
a cut-bank, where she had apparently taken shelter from a knife-edged
wintry blast. "The charge against Richardson is predicated," said County
Attorney Gordon Berg, of Carter county, "upon failure of the husband to
protect his wife," in allowing her to go out into a blizzard alone."
Under Bond Richardson is at liberty under $1,500 bond. He will appear in
district court on the charge, which specifically lists criminal neglect.
The case is expected to be tried next fall. Charges against the rancher,
Berg said, were filed on complaint of Sheriff James Armstrong. At a
preliminary hearing before Justice of the Peace J. R. Lane, testimony of
the sheriff, John T. Hinds and Donald McNabb, hired men at the
Richardson ranch; John Oass, of Belle Fourche, S. D.; Deputy Sheriff
Almon Hall; Mrs. Emma Osgood, mother of Mrs. Richardson, and Henry
Davenport, a neighbor of the Richardsons, was heard. In the testimony it
was brought out Mrs. Richardson left her home Jan. 19, with the avowed
intent of walking to the Davenport ranch a mile away, following a
domestic altercation. The temperature, witnesses said, was 13 degrees
below zero that day.

Body Found When the woman failed to arrive at the Davenport ranch,
Sheriff Armstrong led a searching party that found her frozen body by
following an occasional footprint in drifted snow on southeastern
Montana's rolling rangeland. The body was found in a cut bank, seven
miles from the Richardson home, about a mile over the state line in
Crook county, Wyoming. The temperature the night Mrs. Richardson left
home, witnesses said, fell to about 27 degrees below zero. The body of
Mrs. Richardson, 27-year-old mother of two children, was found four days
after she left home. The Richardson ranch is in the sparsely settled,
drought-stricken cattle country, about 15 miles southeast of Albion,
Mont. Witnesses at the preliminary hearing said Mrs. Richardson had been
in the habit of leaving home and walking to the Davenport ranch
following domestic quarrels. Assistant Prosecutor Berg declined to
discuss the case, saying, "Anything I could say would be entirely
conjectural," and added merely "She walked away" when questioned about
Mrs. Richardson's leaving home. "Why he permitted his wife to go out In
the storm I do not know," said Sheriff Armstrong, who also appeared
reticent and reluctant to discuss the case.

April 1956 Sanders County Montana, Florence Hall of Ronan, born in Reno
Nevada, married Louie E. Richardson.